Hackers' Pub is a place for software engineers to share their knowledge and experience with each other. It's also an ActivityPub-enabled social network, so you can follow your favorite hackers in the fediverse and get their latest posts in your feed.
Scariest part: 472 Starlinks were burned up in the atmosphere in Dec-May. Assuming each satellite is 800kg, and 50% aluminum by mass, that's 1 ton of aluminum PER DAY.
The natural infall rate of aluminum from meteoroids is 0.3 tons per day. Starlink has been ~3x that, for the last 6 months.
Is there such a thing as an online survey / form site that you can configure and setup by providing a config file of some sorts?
I mean, having such a config in git and working on it jointly to polish all of it would be ideal and then just "publish" to the site once the survey goes live.
🏕️ my adventures in #selfhosting - day 198 (summer project edition) 🏖️
Hello Fedi friends,
I hope you've been having a nice week so far.
I've been in childcare mode, thus the silence. I've been thinking about something and I would love to get your advice.
#AskFedi: is there a way to export one's #GoToSocial archive of posts (but not replies to other users)? Like something with command lines that doesn't require tedious copy and paste operations?
I wanted to gather up all the posts about the first 6 months of my self-hosting journey, to neatly organize them on my website (either in multiple blog posts or pages) so that they could be more easily searchable. It's not really ideal to go on an infinite scroll quest in reverse chronological order to see the evolution of my self-hosting journey.
Like, I'm curious to see what I was up to in January but going back in time loading old posts takes forever. And I cannot really search for keywords.
I'd like to keep things organized and easily searchable. And implement a POSSE system going forward... publishing on my site first and then syndicating elsewhere.
If you have any ideas about how I can easily export all my #GtS posts, I'm all ears.
If not, I suppose I will start copying and pasting everything and do monthly installments of my self-hosting journey (aka "month 1" etc.). After all I have 1125 posts (sigh).
Anyways, I hope this finds you well and that you're keeping cool in this scorching heat (especially fellow Europeans).
have a lovely morning/afternoon/evening wherever you are ❤️
<자기소개 #뿌친소> - 로빈이라고 해요! - 2017년부터 마스토돈에서 활동하고 있어요. - 컴퓨터공학과 학부생이에요. 주로 웹 프로그래밍(풀스택), 서버 관리에 대한 이야기를 해요. - 오타쿠예요. 지금은 프로세카, 그 중에서도 니고를 깊게 파고 있어요. - 니고 내의 모든 커플링을 좋아하지만 특히 미즈에나, 마후카나를 좋아해요. 리버스 잘 먹어요. - 그 외에도 백합을 좋아해요. BL도 좀 보는 편이에요. - 파판14를 했었지만, 현생에 치여서 요즘은 못 하고 있어요. - 혐오자(여성혐오, 성소수자 혐오 등등...)는 당연히 싫어해요. - 아무말을 해요. - 연합우주에 계신 여러분들과 더 친해지고 싶어요!
🏕️ my adventures in #selfhosting - day 198 (summer project edition) 🏖️
Hello Fedi friends,
I hope you've been having a nice week so far.
I've been in childcare mode, thus the silence. I've been thinking about something and I would love to get your advice.
#AskFedi: is there a way to export one's #GoToSocial archive of posts (but not replies to other users)? Like something with command lines that doesn't require tedious copy and paste operations?
I wanted to gather up all the posts about the first 6 months of my self-hosting journey, to neatly organize them on my website (either in multiple blog posts or pages) so that they could be more easily searchable. It's not really ideal to go on an infinite scroll quest in reverse chronological order to see the evolution of my self-hosting journey.
Like, I'm curious to see what I was up to in January but going back in time loading old posts takes forever. And I cannot really search for keywords.
I'd like to keep things organized and easily searchable. And implement a POSSE system going forward... publishing on my site first and then syndicating elsewhere.
If you have any ideas about how I can easily export all my #GtS posts, I'm all ears.
If not, I suppose I will start copying and pasting everything and do monthly installments of my self-hosting journey (aka "month 1" etc.). After all I have 1125 posts (sigh).
Anyways, I hope this finds you well and that you're keeping cool in this scorching heat (especially fellow Europeans).
have a lovely morning/afternoon/evening wherever you are ❤️
"LLMs are okay at coding, but at scale they build jumbled messes. I’ve scaled back my use of AI when coding and gone back to using my brain and pen and paper."
Patch there is for "-devel" variant of ports like x11/nvidia-driver-devel.
Runnign on stable/14, amd64 until last night without new issue for me. But as my GPU on hand is old (Quadro P1000 notebook), cannot confirm that the new version solves any of known problems on GPUs with GSP in them by myself.
Nothing is more valuable than a clear-headed understanding of which particular lies are most likely to succeed in the present environment, and which are just evanescent byproducts of the generally mendacious atmosphere. Dodge the decoys, save the right kind of energy to counter the real blows. Turning up the heat in lamenting the current crisis risks mistaking a mere mirage for a more substantial threat.
I found this to be an excellent and orienting read for anyone concerned about the US right now.
While folks are understandably worried about this administration, which has already inflicted significant harms, it's important to stay level headed and aligned with the actual facts and truths. That's our primary defense against what's happening which, as Arendt argued in the 1970s, hinges on a process of defactualization. Shouting "fascism!" and drawing analogies with the Nazis, as this essay argues, is going too far, turning up the heat about a mirage. Much as we wish they'd do better--and they could do better--in point of fact we do still have a functioning judicial system and media ecosystem, and there are significant numbers of people, including politicians and judges, fully willing to challenge every lie the administration emits. As dangerous as these times are we are nowhere near as far along the authoritarian trajectory as shouting "fascism!" makes it sound, and we should really stop doing that. Doing so grants bluffs and bluster more power than it actually has, which is ultimately a form of surrender. We should recognize our own strength and save it for real threats.
This is one of many reasons why I relentlessly call BS on generative AI and the claims about it coming out of the technology sector. There is a defactualization process at work there that plays into the broader political one; some of the individuals enacting this defactualization in tech are personally involved in doing the same in the federal government. If you've been watching you probably know some of their names and the companies they came from. Generative AI is itself a defactualization machine; that's one of its primary appeals to this crew.
Dodge the decoys and save your energy for the real blows.
分析指出,訂閱制並不適合遊戲產業,因為與音樂或影視不同,玩家的遊戲時間有限,多數人每年只會深入玩幾款作品,導致大量內容難以被消化。 https://wccftech.com/xbox-bet-wrong-horse-subscriptions-says-analyst/ Xbox 多年來力推 Game Pass 訂閱服務,試圖以 Netflix 式的模式改變遊戲產業,並砸下重金收購多家遊戲工作室及 Bethesda、Activision Blizzard 等大型發行商,希望藉由獨家大作吸引用戶。然而,Game Pass 的成長始終無法達到預期,不僅無法進軍 PlayStation 與任天堂平台,主機市場也已飽和。分析指出,訂閱制並不適合遊戲產業,因為與音樂或影視不同,玩家的遊戲時間有限,多數人每年只會深入玩幾款作品,導致大量內容難以被消化。此外,免費遊戲與單次付費仍是主流,Game Pass 雖對消費者有吸引力,卻也壓縮了遊戲銷售,影響主機平台的收益。在訂閱增長停滯、轉型壓力下,Xbox 逐漸朝向第三方發行商角色發展,未來可能不再以主機為核心。雖然 Xbox 並未消失,但傳統的 Xbox 模型顯然已經式微,而推動 Game Pass 的領導人 Phil Spencer 短期內仍將繼續留任。整體而言,這場訂閱制賭注並未成功,Xbox 的未來仍充滿變數。